TV land launches awards slugfest with Emmy nominations

More Television insiders are expecting old faces to dominate Thursday as Hollywood revs up for its annual awards merry-go-round with the announcement of the Emmy nominations.
Critics agree that it hasn't been a vintage year, with very few new shows breaking through, but perennial favorites have delivered and the medium continues to out-innovate cinema. "It's taking risks that Hollywood is still hesitant to take, and so far they are paying off."
The Emmys recognize programs shown in the year to May 31, meaning traditional big-hitters from "Better Call Saul" to "House of Cards" and "Veep" are absent this time around.
But HBO's "Game of Thrones" returns from a year off, having made television history in 2016 to become the most decorated fictional show in the Emmys' seven-decade history.
That pits the 2016 drama champion against last year's winner, Hulu's dystopian sci-fi series "The Handmaid's Tale," which is also the 2018 favorite.
Other nominations are likely to come from NBC's family drama "This Is Us" and HBO's dark sci-fi western "Westworld," Netflix hits "Stranger Things" and "The Crown," and FX Cold War spy show "The Americans."
The most star-studded category is likely to be best actor in a limited series or TV movie, with Al Pacino, Kyle MacLachlan, Benedict Cumberbatch and Michael B. Jordan all in the hunt for nominations.
The early money for the win in September is on a much lesser-known face, Darren Criss ("The Assassination of Gianni Versace").
The Television Academy's 22,000-plus members were given two weeks in June to sift through a crowded field of several thousand entries for the small screen equivalent of the Oscars

The Television Academy’s 22,000-plus members were given two weeks in June to sift through a crowded field of several thousand entries for the small screen equivalent of the Oscars

Television insiders are expecting old faces to dominate Thursday as Hollywood revs up for its annual awards merry-go-round with the announcement of the Emmy nominations.

The Television Academy’s 22,000-plus members spent two weeks in June sifting through thousands of entries for the small-screen equivalent of the Oscars.

Critics agree that it hasn’t been a vintage year, with very few new shows breaking through, but perennial favorites have delivered and the medium continues to out-innovate cinema.

“As someone who has traditionally been more about movies than TV, the richness of the small screen landscape these days genuinely excites me,” Hollywood entertainment journalist and producer Simon Thompson told AFP.

“It’s taking risks that Hollywood is still hesitant to take, and so far they are paying off.”

The Emmys recognize programs shown in the year to May 31, meaning traditional big-hitters from “Better Call Saul” to “House of Cards” and “Veep” are…

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